DNA Structure, Function, and Gene Expression: Key Concepts for Biology

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86 Terms

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Johannes Miescher

First described DNA but did not know its function.

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Frederick Griffith

Studied pneumonia-causing bacteria and discovered a transforming substance that changed harmless bacteria into lethal ones.

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Avery and McCarty

Showed that DNA was the transforming principle.

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Hereditary Material

A molecule must transmit a full complement of hereditary information, be found in the same amounts in cells of a given species, be exempt from major change, and be capable of encoding a huge amount of information.

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Hershey and Chase

Confirmed in 1940 that DNA meets the criteria for hereditary material through bacteriophage experiments.

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Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer

A method used to produce clones.

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DNA Molecule Structure

Consists of two strands of nucleotide monomers running in opposite directions and coiled into a double helix.

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DNA Nucleotide Composition

Contains one five-carbon sugar (deoxyribose), three phosphate groups, and one nitrogen-containing base (adenine, thymine, guanine, or cytosine).

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Adenine (A)

One of the four DNA nucleotides.

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Guanine (G)

One of the four DNA nucleotides.

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Cytosine (C)

One of the four DNA nucleotides.

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Thymine (T)

One of the four DNA nucleotides.

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Chargaff's Rules

Bases of the two DNA strands in a double helix pair in a consistent way: A-T and C-G.

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Watson and Crick

Shared ideas about the structure of DNA and built models from scraps of metal.

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Franklin and Wilkins

Worked on identical samples of DNA and contributed to the understanding of DNA structure.

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Erwin Chargaff

Discovered the relationships between DNA bases.

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Rosalind Franklin

Discovered the structure of DNA by X-ray crystallography.

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Maurice Wilkins

Provided experimental evidence of DNA structure.

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James Watson and Francis Crick

Built the first accurate model of a DNA molecule.

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Franklin's Data

Provided critical data about DNA's structure, including phosphate backbones on the outside of the double helix.

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The Double Helix

Proposed by Watson and Crick as consisting of two strands of nucleotides, running in opposite directions, coiled into a double helix held together by hydrogen bonds.

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DNA Sequence

The order of nucleotide bases in a DNA strand (DNA sequence) is genetic information.

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Complementary Base Pairs

The two strands of a DNA molecule are complementary.

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Chromosome

Condensed structure of DNA inside cell.

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Histone

"Spools" of proteins that the DNA strand wraps around inside chromosome.

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Chromosome Number

Sum of all chromosomes in a cell of a given type.

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Diploid

Cells having two of each type of chromosome characteristic of the species (2n).

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Karyotype

Image of an individual's complement of chromosomes arranged by size, length, shape, and centromere location.

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Sister chromatid

One of two attached members of a duplicated eukaryotic chromosome.

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Centromere

Constricted region in a eukaryotic chromosome where sister chromatids are attached.

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Autosomes

Paired chromosomes with the same length, shape, centromere location, and genes.

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Sex chromosomes

Members of a pair of chromosomes that differ between males and females.

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DNA replication

It is a process by which a cell copies its DNA before it divides.

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Semiconservative replication

One strand of each molecule is parental (old) and the other is new.

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DNA polymerase

DNA replication enzyme; assembles a new strand of DNA based on sequence of a DNA template.

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Primer

Short, single strand of DNA that base-pairs with a targeted DNA sequence.

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DNA ligase

Enzyme that seals breaks in double-stranded DNA.

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Mutation

A permanent change in DNA sequence.

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Replication Error

Uncorrected errors in DNA replication may become mutations.

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Ionizing radiation

Can knock electrons out of atoms, breaking DNA.

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Nonionizing radiation

Forms nucleotide dimers that kink DNA and increase mutation rate.

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Chemicals in tobacco smoke

Transfer methyl groups (CH3) to nucleotide bases in DNA, causing mispairs during replication.

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Environmental pollutants

Breakdown products bind irreversibly to DNA, causing replication errors.

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Gene

DNA sequence that encodes an RNA or protein product with a sequence of nucleotide bases (A, T, G, C)

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Transcription

Process of enzymes using the gene's DNA sequence as a template to assemble a strand of messenger RNA (mRNA)

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Translation

mRNA decoded in a sequence of amino acids; result is a polypeptide chain that folds into a protein

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Gene Expression

Process by which the information in a gene becomes converted to an RNA or protein product

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RNA Polymerase

The enzyme that adds nucleotides to the end of a growing RNA strand during transcription

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Promoter Sequence

A sequence near the beginning of a gene where RNA polymerase binds to initiate transcription

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Exons

Sequences that stay in the RNA after processing in eukaryotic cells

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Introns

Sequences removed during RNA processing in eukaryotic cells

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Poly-A Tail

A tail of 50 to 300 adenines added to the end of a new mRNA after splicing

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Codons

Sets of three nucleotides in mRNA that form 'words' in the genetic code

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Genetic Code

A system where sixty-four codons encode twenty amino acids, with some amino acids specified by more than one codon

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tRNA

Transfer RNA that delivers amino acids to the ribosome during translation

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rRNA

Ribosomal RNA that joins with proteins to form intact ribosomes

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mRNA

Messenger RNA that carries the information from DNA to the ribosome for protein synthesis

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Stop Codon

A codon that signals the end of translation

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Amino Acids

Building blocks of proteins specified by codons in mRNA

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Polypeptide Chain

A chain of amino acids that folds into a protein

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Base Pairing Rules

Rules that dictate how nucleotides pair with each other during DNA replication and RNA synthesis

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RNA Modifications

Changes made to RNA in eukaryotic cells before it leaves the nucleus

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Cytoplasm

The part of the cell where translation occurs

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Initiator tRNA

The tRNA that base-pairs with the first mRNA codon during translation initiation

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Ribosome

A cellular structure that assembles polypeptide chains during translation

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Base-pair substitution

Type of mutation in which a single base-pair changes.

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Sickle-cell anemia

An example of a mutation that results from base-pair substitution.

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Reading frame shift mutations

Mutations that shift the reading frame of the mRNA codons.

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Deletion

The removal of one or more base pairs in a mutation.

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Insertion

The addition of one or more base pairs in a mutation.

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Beta thalassemia

An example of a mutation that results from reading frame shift mutations.

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Differentiation

The process by which cells become specialized.

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Transcription factor

Protein that influences transcription by binding to DNA.

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Master gene

Gene encoding a product that affects the expression of many other genes.

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Homeotic gene

Type of master gene that controls formation of specific body parts during development.

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Gene knockout

Altering the expression of a homeotic gene by deleting it entirely.

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PAX6 gene

In humans and many other animals, the PAX6 gene affects eye formation.

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X chromosome inactivation

The process that equalizes expression of X chromosome genes between the sexes.

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SRY gene

Master gene for male sex determination that triggers formation of testes.

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Lactose tolerance

The ability to digest lactose, which most species lose after a certain age.

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Lactase gene

Gene that is no longer transcribed after age five in most humans.

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DNA methylation

Modifications that suppress gene expression by adding a methyl group to DNA nucleotides.

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Epigenetics

Heritable changes in gene expression that are not due to changes in underlying DNA sequence.

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Methyl group

A chemical group (CH3) that can be added to histone proteins or DNA nucleotides to affect transcription.

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Bacterial breakdown of lactose

Occurs when lactose passes undigested through the small intestine, leading to gas production.

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Dosage compensation

Theory that explains how X chromosome inactivation equalizes gene expression between sexes.